Forgotten Field wrote:
Is the CAF process of 200 hours tailwheel and 200 hours T-6 time prior to single engine fighter or bomber in effect? When I heard of the CAF requirements, it sounded like the best structured program out there. I'm really surprised the guy flew a P-51 without at least a checkout in a T-6.
I wouldn't begin to second guess either Mckittrick or Matt Jackson on this accident, but I can say that although T6 time helps a great deal, the 51 is a VERY different animal and ANY pilot getting a bit lax at touchdown in the Mustang can find themselves in a situation that absolutely demands immediate and correct control input, especially power.
If you let a 51 get a bit slow over the fence and set it up just a bit too high, it can pay off quite suddenly. If you react and force the tail down at runway contact you can get a healthy bounce. Accompanied by a pitch input causing a nose rate, you can have a VERY dangerous situation going for you if the throttle in misused in any way. The throttle is a barrel shape and unless you have your throttle hand braced against the quadrant to apply an opposing force for your hand as you make what amounts to a vernier application of power during an excursion like this scenario, you can have a REAL bad day.
The danger is that you have every force imaginable present in this situation. Because you have relative wind on that 11+ foot monster hanging on the nose, you have P factor. Because the nose is rotating in pitch, you have gyroscopic precession in play. Add to this the spiraling slipstream effect on the tail caused by sudden power application and you could have a REAL mess on your hands in a nano-second.
These are yaw corrections. The kicker is that torque is also present and a real issue at low airspeed and high angle of attack;all of which are present as well.
Torque correction is in ROLL, not yaw, so ANY misuse of the throttle to correct the bounce needs BOTH a rudder AND an aileron input.
In this situation it's very easy to bang in enough power to put all these forces in play simultaneously.
I can't think of a more precarious situation for a Mustang and a newbie.
With no airspeed and high alpha, any misuse of throttle on a bounce like that without correcting in BOTH roll and yaw could easily cause exactly what happened to Mckittrick.
You can put a pilot in a T6 or anything else for that matter and in the end, once in the 51, it always boils down to how you set up the flare and what the parameters are going into the landing that matters.
Flying these airplanes is a very demanding pastime. Flown correctly, the 51 is a wonderful airplane that can be handled easily throughout its envelope, but one moments inattention at the wrong time can be extremely costly.
The answer isn't in the T6. The answer is in check pilots concentrating heavily on developing the ability to get a "read" on the attitudes and habit patterns of the pilots they check out in these airplanes; then taking a bit more time to make sure that they have tried everything humanly possible to instill the RIGHT mental attitude and habit patterns required by those who wish to own and fly these aircraft.